D
Duke_of_St_Paul
Guest
I’m interested in becoming Catholic, but I’m unsure whether certain notions of mine would be compatible with Church doctrine. I’ve posted this in another forum but having viewed some of the threads here I feel this forum would be more appropriate.
And please let me know if there is any issues with two threads on the same topic, i.e. if one has to be removed etc.
1. God as the Apophatic Void
I perceive God in terms of negation. Whatever can be said of God is not God but rather what he’s like. God is not even a god but beyond such a notion; beyond loving, merciful, gracious, glorious, etc. Therefore, I perceive God as neither conscious nor unconscious, neither intelligent nor unintelligent, but simply the Truth; he is what he is, ineffable, illimitable, unknowable, and unmeasurable. He is relative to void.
2. God the Emanator, not the Creator
I perceive God as having emanated from himself the physical universe by process of implication. If God is the negative aspect of existence then the physical universe is the positive aspect. Whereby God cannot be described he brought forth, by means of existing, description. Just as all things go together, i.e. light with darkness, good with evil, etc. the physical universe goes together with God because each implies the other.
3. God is Verb-Like and not a Noun
I perceive God being the process and not the processor. However, God is not a verb but merely like it; he transcends the notion of being a verb, but he is absolutely not a noun. He does no acting although he emanates action. Likewise, God does not have a will but emanates one.
4. The Holy Spirit is the Emanation of Will
I perceive the Holy Spirit as an emanation of God, being his will.
5. The Son is the Manifested Reality of God the Father
I perceive the Son as a manifestation of God, being his physical reality. Since God is relative to void, although not void, he emanated Jesus Christ as a result of implication. From God’s emanation of the universe, Jesus Christ was conceived as positive expression in relation to the negative expression of God the Father. Whereas God in unknowable Jesus Christ is knowable, and therefore God becomes knowable, but only through Christ.
And please let me know if there is any issues with two threads on the same topic, i.e. if one has to be removed etc.
1. God as the Apophatic Void
I perceive God in terms of negation. Whatever can be said of God is not God but rather what he’s like. God is not even a god but beyond such a notion; beyond loving, merciful, gracious, glorious, etc. Therefore, I perceive God as neither conscious nor unconscious, neither intelligent nor unintelligent, but simply the Truth; he is what he is, ineffable, illimitable, unknowable, and unmeasurable. He is relative to void.
2. God the Emanator, not the Creator
I perceive God as having emanated from himself the physical universe by process of implication. If God is the negative aspect of existence then the physical universe is the positive aspect. Whereby God cannot be described he brought forth, by means of existing, description. Just as all things go together, i.e. light with darkness, good with evil, etc. the physical universe goes together with God because each implies the other.
3. God is Verb-Like and not a Noun
I perceive God being the process and not the processor. However, God is not a verb but merely like it; he transcends the notion of being a verb, but he is absolutely not a noun. He does no acting although he emanates action. Likewise, God does not have a will but emanates one.
4. The Holy Spirit is the Emanation of Will
I perceive the Holy Spirit as an emanation of God, being his will.
5. The Son is the Manifested Reality of God the Father
I perceive the Son as a manifestation of God, being his physical reality. Since God is relative to void, although not void, he emanated Jesus Christ as a result of implication. From God’s emanation of the universe, Jesus Christ was conceived as positive expression in relation to the negative expression of God the Father. Whereas God in unknowable Jesus Christ is knowable, and therefore God becomes knowable, but only through Christ.